"before" means forcing stuff (this is because of first match algorithm) Use this for your sitewide page admins or page editors.

"default" means what is done if no ACLs are used on the page. It is equivalent to writing exactly these ACLs onto a page. These are also the rights that are merged if Default is written among the ACLs in the page.

SomeGroup is a page name matching page_group_regex with some lines in the form " * Member" (see #Groups).

Trusted is a special group containing all authenticated users of a trusted authentication method.

Known is a special group containing all logged in users.

All is a special group containing all users (known and anonymous users).

Default is a special entry which inserts at the given place the entries from acl_rights_default (see #Default).

right may be an arbitrary word like read, write, delete, revert, admin. Only words in acl_rights_valid are accepted, others are ignored. It is allowed to specify no rights, which means that no rights are given.

Do not put whitespace between the name and the rights - All: write,read is not a valid ACL string.

5. Available rights

These are the available rights you can use in an ACL entry. Be aware that DeletePage and RenamePage are not allowed if the user is not Known, even if a delete right is granted.

read

Given users will be able to read text of this page and read/download its attachments.

write

Given users will be able to write (edit) text of this page and upload attachments.

delete

Given users will be able to delete this page and its attachments.

revert

Given users will be able to revert this page to an older version.

admin

Given users will have admin rights for this page. It means users will be able to change ACL settings, including granting "admin" to others and revoking "admin" from others.

There is no separate rename right: renaming a page requires that a given user has the read, write and delete rights.

6. Processing logic on a single page

When some user is trying to access some ACL-protected resource, the ACLs will be processed in the order they're found. The first ACL matching the user will tell if the user has access to that resource or not and processing will stop once the user matched an ACL entry.

Due to that first match algorithm, you should sort your ACLs: first single usernames, then special groups, then more general groups, then Known and at last All.

For example, the following ACL tells that SomeUser is able to read and write the resources protected by that ACL, while any member of SomeGroup (besides SomeUser, if part of that group) may also admin that, and every other user is able to read it.

#acl SomeUser:read,write SomeGroup:read,write,admin All:read

To make the system more flexible, there are also two modifiers: the prefixes '+' and '-'. When they are used, processing will only stop when requested right for some specific user matches the user and right(s) in the given ACL entry, but will continue if you are looking for another right (or another user). In case of '+' the right will be given, in case of '-' the right will be denied (for the stopping case).

As an example, assuming that SomeUser is a member of SomeGroup, the above ACL could also be written as:

#acl -SomeUser:admin SomeGroup:read,write,admin All:read

This example is only special for SomeUser, because when admin right is queried for SomeUser, it will be denied and processing stops. In any other case, processing continues.

Or even:

#acl +All:read -SomeUser:admin SomeGroup:read,write,admin

+All:read means that when any user is requesting read right, it will be given and processing stops. In any other case, processing will continue. If admin right is queried for SomeUser, it will be denied and processing stops. In any other case, processing will continue. Finally if a member of SomeGroup is requesting some right it will be given if specified there and denied, if not. All other users have no other rights, except when given by configuration.

Notice that you probably won't want to use the second and third examples in ACL entries of some page. They're very useful on the site configuration entries though.

7. Inheriting from defaults

Sometimes it might be useful to give rights to someone without affecting the default rights too much. For example, let's suppose you have the following entries in your configuration:

Now, you have some page where you want to give the "write" permission for SomeUser, but also want to keep the default behavior for All and TrustedGroup. You can easily do that using the Default entry:

#acl SomeUser:read,write Default

This will insert the entries from acl_rights_default in the exact place where the Default word is placed. In other words, the entry above, with the given configuration, is equivalent to the following entry:

ACLs are processed in the order of "before" then "page/default" and then "after", "left to right".

So it begins at the left of "before" with AdminGroup:... - this matches if you are a member of admin group. If it matches, you get those rights (arwdr) and ACL processing STOPS.

If it does not match, ACL processing continues with +TrustedGroup:admin- this matches if you are a member of TrustedGroup.

If it matches, you get the rights (a) and - now the difference because of the modifier - ACL processing CONTINUES! So if there is another match for that group or your user or Known: or All: you will get those rights, too.

If it does not match, ACL processing continues - with the page ACLs (if there are any) or with default ACLs (if there are no pages ACLs) and finally with the "after" ACLs.

While they represent the same thing, inheriting from the defaults has the advantage of automatically following any further change introduced in the defaults.

8. Hierarchical ACL processing

New feature in version 1.6

If you have enabled acl_hierarchic (see above), then the pages are understood as a hierarchy and permissions set on higher-level pages may influence the user's permissions.

Behavior since moinmoin 1.8.4

If the current page doesn't contain an #acl statement, then the parent page's ACL is used instead (or its parent, and so on until there are no parent pages).

Consider the following examples for a page named A/B/C/D, that contrasts the how processing occurs with and without the feature enabled:

acl_hierarchic

Processing Sequence

False

acl_rights_before, A/B/C/D, [acl_rights_default], acl_rights_after

True

acl_rights_before, A/B/C/D or A/B/C or A/B or A or [acl_rights_default], acl_rights_after

As for the default rights, they still work as before, but instead of being included when the current page contains no ACL, it is only used if none of the pages in the hierarchy contain any ACL.

New in moinmoin 1.8.4: Because the parent page's ACL aren't appended anymore to the subpage's ACL, all the ACL for a sub page have to be explicitly listed in that page.

Behavior up to 1.8.3In a nutshell, if a permission is not resolved by the current page, then the parent page's ACL is checked, and then its parent, and so on until there are no parent pages.

All normal ACL rules are followed, as described above, but instead of checking the ACL from only the current page, the page's #acl line is appended with all the ACL from each page in the hierarchy, back to the root page. Consider the following examples for a page named A/B/C/D, that contrasts the how processing occurs with and without the feature enabled:

acl_hierarchic

Processing Sequence

False

acl_rights_before, A/B/C/D, [acl_rights_default], acl_rights_after

True

acl_rights_before, A/B/C/D and A/B/C and A/B and A, [acl_rights_default], acl_rights_after

Note that acl_rights_before, acl_rights_default, and acl_rights_after are not applied once per page in the hierarchy, but rather once overall during the processing of page A/B/C/D. As for the default rights, they still work as before, but instead of being included when the current page contains no ACL, it is only used if none of the pages in the hierarchy contain any ACL. So in a very real sense, the hierarchical ACL does nothing more than replace the current page's ACL with a concatenation of all #acl lines found in that page's hierarchy.

9. Groups

User groups make it easier to specify rights for bigger groups. Normally, the name of the group page has to end with Group like FriendsGroup. This lets MoinMoin recognize it as a list of usernames. This default pattern could be changed (e.g. for non-english languages etc.), see HelpOnConfiguration.

Only SomeUser's friends can read and edit this page:

#acl SomeUser:read,write SomeUser/FriendsGroup:read,write

SomeUser/FriendsGroup would be a page with each top-level list item representing a wiki username in that group:

A page named AdminGroup could define a group of that name and could be also protected by ACLs:

#acl AdminGroup:admin,read,write All:read
* SomeUser
* OtherUser
* This is currently ignored.
Any other text not in first level list will be ignored.

A first level list is one with only one space before the asterisk (and there also has to be one space after the asterisk). The following won't work:

* some user
-- two spaces like so and it doesn't work

You can configure which page names are considered as group definition pages (e.g. for non-english wikis):

page_group_regex = ur'(?P<all>(?P<key>\S+)Group)' # this is the default

If changes to the group page do not take effect, let MoinMoin rebuild the cache by simply removing all files in the directory path_to_your_wiki_instance/data/cache/wikidicts/.

Please note that after creating some group page(s), you maybe want to use those groups in some ACLs in your wiki configuration or on your pages (or nothing will happen - moin does not use something like pre-defined groups).

10. Usage cases

10.1. Public community Wiki on the Internet

The most important point here is to use ACLs only in cases where really needed. Wikis depend on openness of information and free editing. They use soft security to clean up bad stuff. So there is no general need for ACLs. If you use them too much, you might destroy the way wiki works.

This is why either ACLs should not be used at all (default) or, if used, the wikiconfig.py should look similar to that:

A good advice is to have only a few and very trusted admins in AdminGroup (they should be very aware of how a wiki works or they would maybe accidently destroy the way the wiki works: by its openness, not by being closed and locked!).

If using AdminGroup, you should make a page called AdminGroup and use it to define some people who get admin rights.

Specifing BadGuy like shown above basically locks him out - he can't read or edit anything with that account. That makes only sense if done temporarily, otherwise you also could just delete that account. Of course, this BadGuy can also work anonymously, so this is no real protection (this is where soft security will apply).

10.2. Wiki as a simple CMS

If you want to use a wiki to easily create web content, but if you don't want edits by the public (but only by some webmasters), you maybe want to use that in your wikiconfig.py:

So everyone can read, but only the Webmasters can do anything else. As long as they are still working on a new page, they can put

#acl All:

on it, so nobody else will be able to see the unfinished page. When finished, don't forget to remove that line, so that acl_rights_default will be used.

Some page(s) could also allow public comments (like one being called PublicComments), so you give more rights on that page:

#acl All:read,write

10.3. Wiki on Intranet

If you want to use a wiki on your intranet and you trust your users (will not do hostile stuff like locking others out or hijacking pages) to use the admin functionality in a sensible way, you maybe want to use:

So everyone can read, write and change ACL rights, WikiAdmin and BigBoss are enforced to be able to do anything, known users get admin rights by acl_rights_default (so they get it as long as no other ACL is in force for a page).

Consequences:

on a new page, the page creator can put any ACLs he wants

on existing pages, not having ACLs yet, any known user can set up any ACLs he wants

all people (except WikiAdmin and BigBoss) can be locked out by anybody ("known") else on pages without ACLs

10.4. Wiki as a public company page

If you want to use a wiki as the company page, and don't want every user being able to change the company page content, you may want to use something like this: